Berthoud Fire Protection District firefighters spent about two hours Monday morning rescuing a 5-day-old baby goat from an irrigation pipe on a farm south of town.

Berthoud Fire Capt. Scott Lindschmidt, left, and firefighter Shane Primm hold Wilson, a 5-day-old goat they helped rescue from a pipe on a farm on Glenview Drive in Berthoud on Monday. The crew spent about two hours on the farm working to save the goat. Berthoud Fire Protection District Courtesy photo)

The kid, called Wilson, had a baaaa-d day when he “followed his brothers and sisters into the pipe yesterday (Sunday) and was the only one who couldn’t get back out,” the BFPD wrote on Facebook.

After unsuccessfully attempting through the night to free Wilson themselves, the goat’s owners called the Berthoud fire department to the farm on Glenview Drive around 8 a.m. for help, said Berthoud Fire spokesperson May Soricelli.

The fire crew dug about 20 feet of 12-inch concrete pipe out of the ground to reach Wilson. Firefighter Shane Primm then reached in and pulled Wilson free, Soricelli said.

Today, one out of every three men imprisoned in Colorado -- and four out of every five women inmates -- say they have some type of moderate to critical mental health need, according to the Colorado Department of Corrections. The number of inmates with mental health needs in Colorado's prisons has steadily risen in the past two decades.

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